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RUBY (Lat. rubeus, red)

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Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 813 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RUBY (
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Lat. rubeus, red)
  , the most valued of all gem-stones, a red transparent variety of
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corundum, or crystallized alumina . It is sometimes termed "
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oriental ruby" to distinguish it from the
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spinel ruby, which is a stone of inferior hardness, density and value (see SPINEL) . When the word ruby is used without any qualifying prefix, it is always the true or so-called criental stone that is meant in
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modern nomenclature . Ancient writers, relying chiefly on colour, classed together under a
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common name several brilliant red stones, such t.s the ruby, spinel and garnet: thus the avOpaE of
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Theophrastus and the Carbunculus of Pliny were names which seem to have been applied to several distinct minerals . Although the word ruby is used in the
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English
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translation of the Old Testament it is improbable that the true ruby was known to the ancient Hebrews . The ruby crystallizes in the hexagonal
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system (see CORUNDUM) . The crystals have no true cleavage, but tend to break along certain gliding planes . The colour of ruby varies from deep
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cochineal to pale rose-red, in some cases with a tinge of
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purple, the most valued tint being that called by experts
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pigeon's-
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blood colour . On exposure to a high temperature, the ruby becomes green, but regains its
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original colour on cooling . The red colour of ruby may be due to chromium . When a ruby of the most esteemed tint is examined with the dichroscope, one image is generally seen to be
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carmine and the other .aurora-red, the red colour inclining to orange . This test serves to distinguish the true ruby from spinel and from garnet, since these minerals, being cubic, are not dichroic .

Another means of distinction is afforded by the specific gravity of ruby (about 4), which is higher than that of spinel and garnet, whilst the

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superior hardness of the ruby (about g) furnishes yet another test . The high refractivity of ruby is also characteristic, the mean ordinary
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index being 1.77 and the extraordinary 1.76 . When cut and polished the ruby is therefore a brilliant stone, but having weak dispersive power it lacks fire . Subjected to radiant discharge in a Crookes tube, the ruby, like other forms of corundum, phosphoresces with a vivid red glow . The oriental ruby is a
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mineral of very limited distribution . Its most famous localities are in Upper
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Burma, but until the
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British annexation of the country in 1886 the mines were so jealously guarded that little was known as to the conditions under which the mineral occurred . Soon after the annexation, the ruby districts were officially visited, and reported on, by Mr C . Barrington Brown, and specimens from the mines were exhaustively studied by Professor J . W . Judd . The
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principal
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district is situated in the neighbourhood of Mogok, 90 M . N.N.E. of
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Mandalay .

The ruby occurs in bands of a crystalline

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limestone, associated with granitic and gneissose rocks, some of which are highly basic; and it is from the
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anorthite, or lime-felspar, and the associated minerals in the pyroxenegneisses, that the corundum, spinel and
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calcite, may, according to Judd, have been derived . Probably the felspar is first altered to scapolite, and this on decomposition would yield calcium carbonate and hydrous aluminium silicates, from which the anhydrous alumina might ultimately be separated . The limestone contains (in addition to the ruby) spinel, garnet,
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graphite,
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wollastonite, scapolite, felspar,
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mica,
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pyrrhotite and other minerals . The ruby, like other kinds of corundum, suffers alteration under certain conditions, and passes by hydration into gibbsite and
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diaspore, which by further alteration and union with
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silica, &c., may yield margarite, vermiculite,
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chlorite and other hydrous silicates . The Burmese rubies are not generally worked in the lime-stone
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matrix, but are mostly found loose in detrital
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matter, which is clayey and sandy in character and yellowish-brownin colour, and is known locally as " byon." Some of the deposits occur in limestone caverns, where they may, like cave-earth, represent the insoluble residue of the limestone . Workings in the cave-deposits are called " loodwins" (crooked mines) . In the
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alluvium of the valleys, the ruby-pits are known as " twinlones " (round pits), whilst workings in the ruby-earth on the hillsides are termed " hmyaudwins " (
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water mines) . The byon contains, with the ruby, other coloured corundums and spinels . Burmese rubies are found also in crystalline limestone in the hills near Sagyin, about 20 M . N. of Mandalay, and it is of mineralogical
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interest to note that the limestone here contains chondrodite . Rubies are found in Siam, at several localities in the provinces of Chantabun and Krat; and Professor H . Louis has described their occurrence at Moung Klung in this region .

The rubies are found with sapphires and spinels, in gravels, resting in some cases on basic igneous rocks . The Siam rubies are generally of dark colour, often inclining to a deep reddish brown . Rubies occur, with sapphires and other minerals, in the gem-gravels of

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Ceylon, but are not usually of such good colour as the Burmese stones . A cloudy variety, which, when cut with a
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convex
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surface, exhibits a luminous
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star, is known as star-ruby (see ASTERIAS) . In
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peninsular India rubies are rarely found, though they have been reported from the corundum deposits of
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Madras and
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Mysore . The ruby is known, however, to occur in a micaceous limestone at Jagdalak, near
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Kabul in
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Afghanistan . Rubies, generally of pale colour, are found with the sapphires of
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Montana, especially at Yogo Gulch near
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Utica . In the corundum deposits of N . Carolina ruby is occasionally met with, especially at Cowee Creek, Macon county, where it occurs in crystals of
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tabular,
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rhombohedral and prismatic habit . These crystals, sometimes of
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fine colour, are found in gravels resting on a soft rock called saprolite, which results from the weathering of certain basic igneous rocks; and it is notable that the ruby crystals are associated with the variety of garnet termed rhodolite, as described by Professor Judd and W . E . Hidden .

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Australia has occasionally yielded rubies, but mostly of small
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size and inferior quality . In New South Wales and in Victoria they have been found in drift gravels, and a
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magenta-coloured turbid variety from Victoria has been described under the name of barklyite . Rubies have been produced artificially with much success . At one time it was the practice to fuse together small fragments of the natural stone; and gems cut from such material were known as reconstructed rubies . This
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process has given way to Professor A . Verneuil's method of forming artificial ruby from purified
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ammonia-
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alum with a certain proportion of chrome-alum . The finely powdered material is caused to fall periodically into an oxyhydrogen flame, the heat of which decomposes the alum, and the alumina thus set
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free forms liquid drops which collect and solidify as a pear-shaped mass . When of the characteristic pigeon's-blood colour, the synthetical ruby contains about 2.5% of chromic
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oxide . The manufactured ruby possesses the
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physical characters of corundum, but may generally be distinguished by microscopic bubbles and striae . The manufacture is carried out commercially . (For other processes, see GEM, ARTIFICIAL.) It should be noted that several minerals known popularly as rubies have no relation to the true red corundum . Thus, " Cape rubies " from the South
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African
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diamond mines, " Australian rubies" from South Australia, and " Arizona rubies" are merely fine garnets; " Siberian ruby " is red
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tourmaline (see
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RUBELLITE), and " Balas ruby" is
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spinal (q.v.) .

Ruby

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silver is a name applied to
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light red silver ore, or
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proustite; ruby copper is merely
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cuprite, in brilliant crystals; and ruby-blende is a clear red variety of
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zinc sulphide . Judd, Phil . Trans., 1897, 187, p . 151 . For the ruby of Siam, see The Ruby and
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Sapphire Deposits of Moung Klung, Siam," by H . Louis, Mineralog . Mag., 1894, 10, p . 267 . For synthetical ruby, see G . F . Herbert Smith, Mineralog . Mag., 1908, 15, p .

153; and J .

Boyer, La Synthese
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des pierres precieuses (Paris, 190 ) . (F . W .

End of Article: RUBY (Lat. rubeus, red)
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